Sunday, April 3, 2011

Diya ghuma ke!! : India - ODI 0World Champs 2011

ah, where do we start? The numbers? The facts? The series of events that led to this moment? or just the sheer intesnity of the tidal wave of emotions sweeping through a billion-plus hearts? April 2nd, 2011 will be forever etched in the memories of a generation, scratching out the agony of March 23rd, 2003, as the world saw a Demi-God's destiny fulfilled, a nation's pride restored, one leader with his beliefs vindicated. Two images shall be engraved on the minds canvas: "EL CAPITAN"'s finish with an exclamation point - the winning six , and the victory lap with the Demi-God, misty eyed and hoisted on the shoulders of GenNext.

over a span of six weeks, we've seen an epic unfold before out very eyes. been through the depths of hapless despair, ridden crests of ecstasy and witnessed the reprise of a sublime talent who looked all but lost in the wilderness just a few months back. that is another testament to the nous of one MS Dhoni, who before the campaign kicked off, had sounded off the warning about Yuvraj being a dangerous player who knows how to excel in a long tournament. Just watch out if Yuvi gets a couple of fifties, he had said, and was he proven right or what! 4 man-of-the match performances, 4 fifties, 15 wickets and one World Cup final chase-finish later, Yuvraj Singh stands as the Man of the tournament, at the culmination of one of the most extraordinary redemptions in world cricket.

and Yuvraj in turn, had announced that he was playing the world cup for someone special. Who could be more special than the Demi-God himdelf! In his sixth world cup campaign, he was the one man who showed unwavering single minded determination to carry the team to the end through sheer will power if need be. Afterall, he's been doing the same for over two decades. We've been saying all along that it would be poetic for Sachin to lift THE trophy at his home ground, even grander if with his hundredth century. well, better the trophy than the century. all we can say is that it was destiny. Why else would that damp morning in 2003 have turned into a run-fest for a rampaging Ponting? Why else would that belter at the Eden chave crumbled to a square-turning nightmare that evening in 1996? Each of those campaigns had its high points, its stellar performances. While 1996 was Sachin all the way, 2003 saw him aided by a remarkably perentrating Indian bowling (Srinath, Zaheer, and Nehra had more than 11 wickets each) only to be let down at the final hurdle. Not this time.

this time, India knew it didn't have a penetrating attack. Zaheer was THE strike bowler, the Ace of Spades in the hands of the indomitable gambler, MS Dhoni. And he used Zak exactly like one. Throughout the tournament, Zak was Dhoni's go-to man. Need a wicket, go to Zak. The ball's doing a bit, go to Zak. too many runs in the middle overs, go to Zak. Stilfing a batting powerplay, go to Zak. Hell, just for kicks, go to Zak once a while!! And has he delivered or what. apart from the forgettable las three overs, [that this time didnt cost the world] Zak has been impeccable, clinical and completeley nerve-less, deservedly finishing as the top wicket taker, alongside Shahid Afridi who metamorphosed into a phenomenon that carried Pakistan to the semis on his own wings. Zaheer, though found almost unexpected support in Yuvraj's innoucous left-arm spin. The effect of which was amply visible in the knock-out stages, even if one chooses to not consider the matches against Ireland n Holland.

This was also a world cup which saw 5 Indian centuries from 4 different individuals. Sehwag fired big in the first game, with Kohli following his footsteps. Sachin crossed the 3-figure mark twice, against England and against South Africa showcasing the divine elegance of his subtle craft. The last one came from Yuvraj in Chennai, against the Windies in a display of pure grit and determination. That ton, and Zak's kunckled slower ball to dismiss Devon Smith were the points when the tide turned decisively. It infused beleif in a team that had been criticized for toothless bowling, irresponsible powerplay batting and downright pathetic feilding. The team India that took the field against WI, and in the knock-out stages was a transformed unit. The energy had lifted, there was a sense of purpose in each move, you could feel that the pieces were all starting to fall in place.

This is where we pause and doff our hats to Garry Kirsten, Paddy Upton and the complete support staff, and for the umpteenth time, acknowledge MS Dhoni's sublimely instinctive and seemingly autocratic yet inspired brand of leadership. The decision to use R.Ashwin right at the business end, the "mistake" of picking Nehra over Ashwin in the Semis, the "trials" to settle on the final team composition, the willingness to look past the "atleast 2 spinners in an Indian team" school of thought, and the masterstroke of almost shielding Yuvraj from Murali in the final were all big moves that came off. Of course there were others that did not, but all's well that ends well. Dhoni's knock in the finals almost overshadowed Gambhir's fighting 97 and the Gambhir-Kohli reconstruction. It just goes to show that this Indian team did what the Aussies did in 2003 : Every time the team found itself in a crisis, somebody put their hand up. more often than not it was Yuvraj, but in the big game, it was the Captain's turn to seal the campaign in his own inimitible style. As the man himself said, he had let the pressure get the better of him earlier, but not this time. This time he knew exactly what was required, and we once again saw the calm, calculative, confident Dhoni, assured of his ability to hit the power shots when needed. And like the IPL semifinals last year, he controlled the chase to perfection, exploding in a flurry of boundaries at the end to finish it off with a disdainful swipe over mid wicket for six.

while all this was unfolding on the field, one man's cherished vision was coming to fruition. Twenty-one years of blood, sweat and tears finally... finally crystalized in a moment of unbridled joy. In a way, it was also the dream of a whole generation of Indians like us, who have bled blue all this while. To tell you the truth, the only constant in some of our lives has been Sachin's presence at the wicket. He's been India's blue-eyed boy ever since we've gained cognisance of the world around us. For those of us who've witnessed the devastating loss of 1996 as children, the heartbreak of 2003 and the complete debacle of 2007, this victory coems as a panacea to all the wounds of that past. If that the effect on mortals like us, one can just imagine what it means to sachin himself. Virat Kohli couldn't have summed it up better "He's carried the hopes of a billion for twenty-one years, its about time we carried him on ours". He's seen it slip away five times, agonizingly close once, a little further once more, but it was to happen on this night. the whole thing somehow had a sense of pre-ordainedness, as if the Gods themselves had appointed this night as the night when the Demi-God would finally see his destiny fulfilled. This victory is for all those who have bled blue. This victory is for Sachin. word limit.

Friday, February 25, 2011

CWC week 1 : A tale of Varying Fortunes

As we speak, Bangladesh and Ireland are locked in a tight battle for ascendancy to round up an eventful first week at the Cricket World Cup 2011. The week saw all teams compete at least once, the highlight for me being an interesting glimpse at the state of the game in the lesser fancied cricketing nations: Zimbabwe, Bangladesh, Kenya, Netherlands, Ireland and for sake of completeness, Canada.

The common factor in all the "associate" teams performances has been the inability to capitalize on hard gained advantages. Ireland seem to be trying despreately to prove my point. 150-5 to 165-8 with a target of 206 is a prime example of how if one is playing to just "compete at the world stage" instead of playing to win, one ends up squandering good positions. Netherland's loss to England was another case in point. After scoring 292 with that innings of a lifetime from Ryan tenDoeschate, one would have thought Oranje would show more spirit in their defense of the total. Peitersen came out blazing but went quiet all of a sudden as Strauss hacked his way to 88. The much talked about "momentum" shifted there. the dutch had literally run the Poms ragged in the field. There were no-balls for too few fielders in the circle towards the end from England. I mean .. seriously ... against Netherlands?!?!?! and this was supposed to be one of the favourites for the title. Dr.Baltar has had visions about how England might not even make it to the quarters at this rate. Anyhoo, the downfall of the Dutch was the strangely timid fileds they set. It was as if they were willing to let the Poms run 10 in an over but not hit boundaries. Thats exactly what happened till over no. 49. the Dutch became victim no. 3 of the minnow mindset in this tourney.

No.1 and 2 were bagged Kenya and Zimbabwe, of course. Here we have a team that has arguably the best record of all non-test playing nations, a team that has seen the semi-final stage of a world cup 8 years back, a team that once was on the verge of test playing status. that they were never granted that status is a different tragedy. The way Kenya capitulated against New Zealand, and let Pakistan run away after an airtight opening spell was plain disappointing. True, this is a team sans some of the names that featured in almost all of its glory days, but one would have expected more grit from the African side. Same can be said of Zimbabwe, a side on the rebound after much strife, their performance against Australia was a bit baffling. Dr.Baltar is confounded and cannot discern whether the Aussies were taking it slow after two big thrashings from India and SA in the warm-ups or whether the Zimbabweans did really bowl that well to start with. 260 was a chaseable score though, and a little more fight was expected from the men sporting red. They did however, have their moment of glory when Mpofu thre down the wickets from the midwicket boundary, making the great Punter see lots of RED!! So much so that it cost an innocent TV set its life at his hands... deplorable action, says the good Dr.. Any bets on how much a Virat Kohli or a Yuvraj Singh or a Bhajji would have been fined for such a "show of disgust"?? :P

Canada on the other hand knew exactly what they were doing. They were playing the rabbit caught in the headlights of a speeding truck on an unlit highway at midnight. Sri Lanka promptly crushed them with utmost ease. No nonsense, no hiccups, comprehensive mauling. The points table will show all associate teams with losses aginst their names, but it doesn't do justice to the unexpected brilliance from Netherland, the incredible implosion of Kenya and the baffling start to Zimbabwe's bowling innings. West Indies, one must say are trying incredibly hard to gain a place amongst these minnows. They too, did a royal job of screwing up a great start against SA. Much like Amla for India, AB seems to be their nemesis. last time they met in aa world cup, he'd poubded 146 on one leg, and he promptly helped himself to another ton yesterday.

Amongst the big boys, New Zealand flattered against Kenya to return to their shambolic top-order ways against the Aussies. After the Kenyan demolition job and the earthquake back home, the crushing defeat against Australia leaves the Kiwis in a very shaky state. The Dr. doesn't fancy them as Semi-finalists. they'll make the quarters just because there are 3 absolute pushovers in their group. Pakistan looked solid with four half centuries and a 5ver from Afridi, but their real test comes tomorrow, against Sri Lanka. its a mouth watering contest, that. A possible dress rehearsal of the Semi-final [oohh.. the Dr. is in a real soothsayer mode today :P]! It will set the tone for the weeks to come, for sure. both teams need a clear ascendancy before they come up against the ominous touch of Watto n Mitch. Watson n Johnson look like they are determined to carry a less fancied australian side through this title defense. It will be fascinating to follow their exploits over the next few days.

And with that we come to the clash that'll always play up the "Lagaan" sentiments. India V England. Judging by England's performance against the Oranje, the Poms should be bracing themselves for a long long day in the field, and lots of "Jellybeans" from Zak n Yuvi "pies" specially reserved for KP. it'll be interesting to see how Swann performs. We all know Viru thinks spinners do not deserve to bowl to him, n how he and the demi-God tackle Swann might decide the fate of the game. [for those with theie subtext-detectors turned OFF, Dr. Baltar doesn't think English bowlers deserve to get these two out.] As always, The Dr. shall bleed blue on Sunday!
GO INDIA!!

Saturday, February 19, 2011

The Perfect Start ...

WOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!
Take that Bangladesh! That should give you some perspective!! 2007 was an aberration, people.. wake up n smell the coffee!! or as my friend Dr.Sheldon Cooper would like to say, "neener neener!!"

With that out of the way, lets look back at the day's goings-on. The so-called flat track bullies from India hopped across the much blurred border to B'desh, n proceeded to open up a can of unprecedented whoop-A$$ on a world cup host team. And the astounding part is, they didnt even seem to break a sweat while performing a clinical dissection of an insipid, one-dimensional bowling attack, leaving the field, and the sizeable crowd jaded to say the least. You could have heard a fly sneeze while Sehwag and Kohli were crafting one of the most damaging partnerships in WorldCup Cricket. Flashes of Taunton, 1999... you bet!!!

Virender Sehwag was a picture of determination today, and might just have done enough to absolve himself of the blasphemy of running out the Demi-God. Tendulkar's departure just seemed to have strengthened his resolve to make his presence count, boy did he make it count! Dr.Baltar heard of his century coming up in the 31st over and instantly predicted a double-ton. but after all, as much as he might want to pretend otherwise, the good Dr. is still human. Sehwag looked agonizingly close [and in considerable agony] to going past the magic mark, only to hole out on 175. But he had already done more than enough to bludgeon B'desh out of the game. The secret of his success was the low-risk approach in the first 100, and the amazingly straight batted hitting in the next 75. there was a point when a physically restricted Sehwag was lobbing every ball and it was still falling between feilders for 2!

Virat Kohli's ton was just as brilliant, if not more. Bear in mind, this is a 22 year old batsman, in his second real seson of international cricket at the senior level [he's been in n out since 2008, bt dhaka 2009-10 was when he really announced himself], striding out in his first ever world cup game, and did he live up to his ICC #2 ranking or what! A cautious start with a steady acceleration to 50 was punctuated with regular boundary pings, some delightfully straight hitting and uncannily piercing pull-shots. towards the end, each time he pulled, it seemed to beat the two hapless fielders at mid wicket. The flawless century today just adds on to this reputation as the rising star of Indian Cricket. His steady performances make the top-4 of the Indian batting line up a quartet to be dreaded by the opposition.

One must give Bangladesh credit for coming out swinging the way they did. Poor old Sreesanth faced the brunt of a charged opening onslaught for the n-th time, proceeding to get himself hit out of the attack in his 3rd over. Now, Dr. Baltar might have got his prediction about Sehwag's 200 wrong, but captain cool seemed to have known beforehand that Sreesanth will need replacing pretty damn soon. The Dr. can't seem to think of a better explanation of playing 3 seamers n 1 spinner on a slow-ish track. Imrul Kayes started in a mad frenzy, to be followed by Tamim Iqbal and Junaid Sidique. They had at one stage propelled Bangladesh to 70/1 in the first 11, but once spin was introduced, the brakes came firmly on, and the momentum just never recovered. 370 is a huge score, and it would have been all too easy to go hell for leather n get bundled for 150, but Bangladesh showed some nous today by toughing it out with a decent run rate. The Dr. predicts that this total would have a major impact when the time arrives to stake a claim on a quarter-final slot.

Another positive for India was Munaf Patel's restrictive bowling and 4-wicket haul. He might need to be a bit cleverer with his lines, lengths and variations against the big guns of SA and ENG though. Harbhajan Singh seems to enjoy his role of the momentum breaker, and Zaheer Khan just showed why he's been trusted with the responsibility of speraheading the Indian bowling. [Dr.Baltar invites everyone to pray with him that Zak doesnt repeat the 2003 final, when he plays at the Wankhede on April 2nd, 2011! ]

All said and done, India couldn't have asked for a more explosive opening to their Campaign. Sehwag in destructive form, Kohli in sublime touch and the sheer presence of the Demi-God should be enough to see them through this round. The challenge for MSD is to get the other batters, including that enigmatic Southpaw Yuvraj Singh in striking form and ready to stand up and be counted when the crunch times come calling. The enormous net run rate helps immensely, too. One step taken towards a 28-year old dream. 7 more to go!
GO INDIA!!!!!!!!

De ghuma ke!!

well here we go ... 4 years forth from the colossal stupor that was world cup 2007, and we find ourselves back in the supercharged, ultra colourful, manic frenzied environs of the subcontinent for what promises to be the turning point in the destiny of the middle-aged man's staple cricket diet : the one-day game. Yes, I did say that. Most of us who grew up loving the 50 over game are either in our late 20s or 30s, and in some cases 40s.. the frenetic pace of T20 is more suited for the smaller attention span of Gen-Y, and ironically, the meteoric rise of the shortest form threatens to do to 50-over cricket, what the latter did to test match cricket in its early years.
this edition, though promises to be a much needed shot-in-the-arm with no clear favourite [go India!!!!!!]. but this isn't the time to reminisce.. this isn't the time for forboding, this isnt the time to get nostalgic, that time is past. now's the time to limber up, wear your heart on your sleeve and lose yourself in the spectacle that awaits.

as the great Imran Khan once said, each World Cup has its own rhythm, and if the warm-up games were any indication, this one promises to have a gripping pace, rising and falling as we move towards the knock-outs waltzing our way through a month-long group stage. there'll be some brilliant solos sounding through, someriveting deuels [and hopefully some entertaining verbal deules, too!]. New stars will be born, the ones in their prime will shine bright, some will go supernova and some beyond the horizon, leaving behind a great legacy in their wake. then will be the pause as the strongest contenders brace themselves for the home stretch, as the world waits with bated breath for the maddening crescendo culminating at the Wankhede on April 2nd.

through all this mayhem, yours truly try to pick up the pieces every now n then and figure out a method to the impending madness. exciting times lie ahead for the game's connoisseurs worldwide, 3 nations of cricket fanatics, and a billion souls praying for the demi-God to clinch the only feather to illude his hat thus far. one of them shall be mine. somewhere down the line, nothing else really matters to a blue-bleeding Indian.
Go Sachin! Go India!!